Hostages taken in busy downtown Sydney, Australia coffee shop

Hostages taken in busy downtown Sydney, Australia coffee shop

Developing:..

Sydney on ***** as at least 13 Hostages held at cafe in heart of city

Sydney (CNN) — [Breaking news update at 12:19 a.m. ET]

Police negotiators have had contact with a hostage taker in the cafe where an unspecified number of people have been held for hours, said New South Wales Police Deputy Commissioner Catherine Burn.

[Breaking news update at 12:05 a.m. ET]

Three people ran out of a Sydney cafe where an unidentified person or people had taken Hostages Monday, CNN affiliate Seven Network reported.

[Original story posted at 11:55 p.m. ET]

Hundreds of police officers on Monday shut down a usually bustling area in the heart of Sydney, where an unconfirmed number of people are being held hostage in a popular cafe.

Chilling images from local media showed people, believed to be hostages, with their hands pressed against the glass of the Lindt Chocolate Cafe in Sydney’s central business district.

Footage showed them holding up a black flag with Arabic writing on it that reads: "There is no God but God and Mohammed is the prophet of God."

Authorities said many of the details about the situation remained unclear, including the number of people inside the cafe and the motivations of the hostage taker.
Abbott: Incident is disturbing, terrifying
Photos: Hostage situation in Sydney Photos: Hostage situation in Sydney
Police: ‘We are being tested today’

"We don’t know whether this is politically motivated, although obviously there are some indications that it could be," Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott told reporters.

The Islamic writing on the banner stoked fears that the crisis in Sydney could be linked to extremists. Australia, which is part of the international coalition fighting the terrorist group ISIS in the Middle East, said in September that it had foiled a plot by Islamic militants to carry out a public execution.

New South Wales Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione said it wasn’t yet clear whether the situation at the cafe was a terrorist event but that police are on "a footing that would be consistent with a terrorist *****."

He said police haven’t so far had direct contact with the armed hostage taker, who appears to have taken staff and customers captive as people were heading to work on Monday morning in the Martin Place area.

Chris Kenny, an editor at The Australian newspaper, said he was at the cafe Monday morning. He left shortly before the siege started.

"As police quickly swarmed and cleared the area, I turned to see a man against the window, facing out with his hands raised," he wrote in his account of the incident. "At first I was relieved thinking this was the gunman responding to police — but soon the awful realisation the customers were being forced against the windows."

CNN affiliate Seven Network reported that at least 13 people are being held at the cafe, but Scipione declined to say how many were in there.
MAP: Sydney CBDMAP: Sydney CBD

Police barricaded off streets and evacuated buildings near the cafe, bringing an eerie quiet to a district typically buzzing with pedestrians and vehicles.

The Martin Place train station was shut down, according to police. They urged people to stay away from the area, but some local office workers gathered at the scene to try to find out what was going on.

The buildings evacuated included U.S. Consulate General, said Alicia Edwards, a spokeswoman. All personnel have been accounted for, although it’s not known whether there are any U.S. citizens among the hostages. U.S. President Barack Obama has been briefed on the situation.

Sydney on ***** as hostages held at cafe in city – CNN.com

Hostages taken in busy downtown Sydney, Australia coffee shop

Hostages taken in busy downtown Sydney, Australia coffee shop

Developing:..

Sydney on ***** as at least 13 Hostages held at cafe in heart of city

Sydney (CNN) — [Breaking news update at 12:19 a.m. ET]

Police negotiators have had contact with a hostage taker in the cafe where an unspecified number of people have been held for hours, said New South Wales Police Deputy Commissioner Catherine Burn.

[Breaking news update at 12:05 a.m. ET]

Three people ran out of a Sydney cafe where an unidentified person or people had taken Hostages Monday, CNN affiliate Seven Network reported.

[Original story posted at 11:55 p.m. ET]

Hundreds of police officers on Monday shut down a usually bustling area in the heart of Sydney, where an unconfirmed number of people are being held hostage in a popular cafe.

Chilling images from local media showed people, believed to be hostages, with their hands pressed against the glass of the Lindt Chocolate Cafe in Sydney’s central business district.

Footage showed them holding up a black flag with Arabic writing on it that reads: "There is no God but God and Mohammed is the prophet of God."

Authorities said many of the details about the situation remained unclear, including the number of people inside the cafe and the motivations of the hostage taker.
Abbott: Incident is disturbing, terrifying
Photos: Hostage situation in Sydney Photos: Hostage situation in Sydney
Police: ‘We are being tested today’

"We don’t know whether this is politically motivated, although obviously there are some indications that it could be," Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott told reporters.

The Islamic writing on the banner stoked fears that the crisis in Sydney could be linked to extremists. Australia, which is part of the international coalition fighting the terrorist group ISIS in the Middle East, said in September that it had foiled a plot by Islamic militants to carry out a public execution.

New South Wales Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione said it wasn’t yet clear whether the situation at the cafe was a terrorist event but that police are on "a footing that would be consistent with a terrorist *****."

He said police haven’t so far had direct contact with the armed hostage taker, who appears to have taken staff and customers captive as people were heading to work on Monday morning in the Martin Place area.

Chris Kenny, an editor at The Australian newspaper, said he was at the cafe Monday morning. He left shortly before the siege started.

"As police quickly swarmed and cleared the area, I turned to see a man against the window, facing out with his hands raised," he wrote in his account of the incident. "At first I was relieved thinking this was the gunman responding to police — but soon the awful realisation the customers were being forced against the windows."

CNN affiliate Seven Network reported that at least 13 people are being held at the cafe, but Scipione declined to say how many were in there.
MAP: Sydney CBDMAP: Sydney CBD

Police barricaded off streets and evacuated buildings near the cafe, bringing an eerie quiet to a district typically buzzing with pedestrians and vehicles.

The Martin Place train station was shut down, according to police. They urged people to stay away from the area, but some local office workers gathered at the scene to try to find out what was going on.

The buildings evacuated included U.S. Consulate General, said Alicia Edwards, a spokeswoman. All personnel have been accounted for, although it’s not known whether there are any U.S. citizens among the hostages. U.S. President Barack Obama has been briefed on the situation.

Sydney on ***** as hostages held at cafe in city – CNN.com

George Michael taken to hospital after suffering ‘mystery collapse’

George Michael taken to hospital after suffering ‘mystery collapse’

George Michael was taken to hospital last week after he collapsed at home.

Two ambulances were called to the musician’s north London residence at 8am on Thursday morning (22 May) by a worried friend, the London Ambulance Service has confirmed.


Witnesses claim the ambulance crews only left the house with the singer four hours after their arrival. They then took Michael to hospital for emergency treatment.


“We sent two ambulance crews and staff treated one patient, a man, who was then taken to hospital,” a spokesman for the ambulance service told The Mail.


Meanwhile, Michael’s publicist told The Sun: “George Michael was in hospital for routine tests but there is nothing further to say.”


The report is the latest in a string of health scares for the star in recent years. In May 2024, Michael was airlifted to hospital with a head injury after he fell out of a moving car on the M1.


He was struck down with pneumonia 18 months earlier. Upon his recovery, he made a tearful statement to fans outside his home, telling press it had been “touch and go” as to whether he lived after doctors were forced to perform an emergency tracheotomy on him to keep him breathing.


In September 2024, Michael was handed an eight-week prison term, banned from driving for two years and sentenced to 100 hours of community service for crashing his Range Rover into a north London branch of Happy Snaps the previous July.

George Michael taken to hospital after suffering ‘mystery collapse’ – People – News – The Independent

Chloe Sevigny thinks jocks have taken over NYC: ‘It’s like a frat house’

Chloe Sevigny thinks jocks have taken over NYC: ‘It’s like a frat house’

خليجية

Chloe has a new interview with the Daily Beast. She’s promoting her newly announced Chloe Book, which is a style book that comes out out in2020 (you can read about it in the full interview). In these excerpts, Chloe’s still a hilariously judgy hipster. She laments all the jocks who have taken over NYC even though she prefers “a macho dude.” These jocks are ruining her vibe, man:

French men vs. American men: “I’ve never dated a French man! I want to be the sexy one. I feel like they do an overtly sexy thing–at least the ones I know–but I’d rather have me be the sexy one. I like more of … a macho dude.”

Her recent move to Brooklyn:
“Two weeks ago. I just sold my apartment a year ago. After ten years of living in the East Village, I was on 10th St. between 2nd and 3rd, I was like, ‘Get me the f— out of here.” I was looking around a lot in Manhattan, but the prices were exorbitant. And then I looked in Brooklyn, and I didn’t want to live in ‘hip’ Brooklyn, so I moved out to the dorkiest, hokiest neighborhood–Park Slope–and I’m really feeling the vibes out there. But the flight patterns out there are constant. I’d read a bit about it in the New York Times, but I didn’t realize how bad it was ’til I moved out there–planes constantly buzzing overhead.”

Rumors of bedbugs on the L-train:
“On the trendy train?”

The state of NYC:
“I’m trying to stay positive. A lot of people are hating on everything that’s going on. But I love New York so much. But walking around the East Village, I just want to cry at the state of it. There are so many f—in’ jocks everywhere! It’s like a frat house everywhere. There are all those terrible bars like The 13th Step, and it’s just spreading over to A and B. I don’t know if it’s a sign of the times, but where are the real weirdos? The real outcasts? They’re a vanishing breed here. Maybe New York isn’t drawing that anymore because it’s too expensive. Vintage clothing shops are sort of a ****phor for the state of New York City, because they’re not ‘vintage,” and they’re expensive as hell now. That’s what I call ‘Fashion Goths.’ You see these kids walking on the street and think, ‘Oh, look at that Goth kid,’ and then you realize it isn’t a Goth kid, it’s just a ‘Fashion Goth’ who’s dressed as a Goth kid. It’s so disparaging.”

On social media:
“I’ve never had a Twitter, and my Facebook is private. Maybe I should do a promotional, Instagram-y thing … but I don’t even have an iPhone yet. I have a BlackBerry. I like to evolve with the times, but it just seems like over-sharing. I already have to share too much with all the vampires of the world. I have this girl I’m friends with on Facebook, and even she talks about ‘wanting likes.’ It’s weird that creative minds like hers are striving for this sense of approval, and this dopamine release. It’s really dangerous.”


[From Daily Beast]

Cele|bitchy | Chloe Sevigny thinks jocks have taken over NYC: ‘It’s like a frat house’

Kirsten Dunst: Actors Who Get Taken Advantage of "Court That Stuff"

Kirsten Dunst: Actors Who Get Taken Advantage of "Court That Stuff"

خليجية

Kirsten Dunst doesn’t have much empathy for anyone complaining about the casting couch.


In an interview with W Magazine guest-editor Sofia Coppola, the 31-year-old reveals she’s never worked with a director who made an inappropriate advance on her, explaining, "I don’t give off That vibe."


"I think you court That stuff," she says, "and to me, it’s crossing a boundary That would hinder the trust in your working relationship."


That’s not to say That the former child star’s career ascent, which included a 2024 voluntary rehab stint for depression, has been seamless. "[My] hardest age was 27," she tells Coppola. "I had to figure out how to navigate differently through my life."


Fortunately, though, things are looking up for Dunst these days. "My favorite age is now," she gushes. "I love my friendships, and I know I have fun things to look forward to."





Kirsten Dunst: Actors Who Get Taken Advantage of Court That Stuff | E! Online